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Informed by the most up-to-date research from around the world,
as well as examples of good practice, this handbook analyzes values
education in the context of a range of school-based measures
associated with student wellbeing. These include social, emotional,
moral and spiritual growth - elements that seem to be present where
intellectual advancement and academic achievement are being
maximized. This text comes as 'values education' widens in scope
from being concerned with morality, ethics, civics and citizenship
to a broader definition synonymous with a holistic approach to
education in general. This expanded purview is frequently described
as pedagogy relating to 'values' and 'wellbeing'.
This contemporary understanding of values education, or values
and wellbeing pedagogy, fits well with recent neuroscience
research. This has shown that notions of cognition, or intellect,
are far more intertwined with social and emotional growth than
earlier educational paradigms have allowed for. In other words, the
best laid plans about the technical aspects of pedagogy are bound
to fail unless the growth of the whole person - social, emotional,
moral, spiritual and intellectual, is the pedagogical target.
Teachers and educationalists will find that this handbook provides
evidence, culled from both research and practice, of the beneficial
effects of such a 'values and wellbeing' pedagogy.
Some revision of public schooling history is necessary to challenge
the dominant mythology that public schools were established on the
grounds of values-neutrality. In fact, those responsible for the
foundations of public education in Australia were sufficiently
pragmatic to know that its success relied on its charter being in
accord with public sentiment. Part of the pragmatism was in
convincing those whose main experience of education had been
through some form of church-based education that state-based
education was capable of meeting the same ends. Hence, the
documents of the 1870s and 1880s that contained the charters of the
various state and territory systems witness to a breadth of vision
about the scope of education. Beyond the standard goals of literacy
and numeracy, education was said to be capable of assuring personal
morality for each individual and a suitable citizenry for the
soon-to-be new nation. As an instance, the NSW Public Instr- tion
Act of 1880 (cf. NSW, 1912), under the rubric of "religious
teaching," stressed the need for students to be inculcated into the
values of their society, including understanding the role that
religious values had played in forming that society's legal codes
and social ethics. The notion, therefore, that public education is
part of a deep and ancient heritage around values neutrality is
mistaken and in need of se- ous revision. The evidence suggests
that public education's initial conception was of being the
complete educator, not only of young people's minds but of their
inner character as well.
The role of women in Islamic societies, not to mention in the
religion itself, is a defining issue. It is also one that remains
resistant to universal dogma, with a wide range of responses to
women's social roles across the Islamic world. Reflecting this
heterogeneity, the editor of this volume has assembled the latest
research on the issue, which combines contemporary with historical
data.
The material comes from around the world as well as from Muslim
and non-Muslim researchers. It takes in work from majority Muslim
nations such as Bangladesh, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Pakistan,
Palestine, Tunisia and Turkey, as well as countries with troubled
interfaith relations such as India and Israel. Nations with
minority Muslim populations such as France, the UK, Canada and
Australia, are also represented. The work also features varying
Islamic sub-groups such as the two main ones, Sunni and Shi'a, as
well as less well known populations such as the Ismaili Muslims. In
each case, the work is underpinned by the very latest
socio-theological insights and empirical data."
This volume is the first handbook that brings together cutting-edge
international research on teacher ethos from a broad array of
disciplines. The main focus will be on research that illustrates
current conceptualizations of ethos and its importance for acting
effectively and responsibly in and out of the classroom. Research
will encompass updated empirical and philosophical work that points
to the difference in learning when teaching is practised as a moral
activity instead of a merely functional one. Authors are among the
world's foremost researchers whose work crosses over from moral
education into psychology, neuroscience, sociology, philosophy,
pedagogy, and curriculum, drawing on these various fields of
research. Today, more than ever, we understand that teachers, like
other professionals, need more than subject-matter expertise for
acting responsibly and doing their best in their daily duties.
Doing so requires possessing a guiding system of professional
ethics, moral positioning, goals, norms, and values - in other
words: a professional ethos. While the handbook concentrates on
Western domains in the current era, the work will extend to other
cultures and times as well. With this comprehensive range of
perspectives, the book will be attractive and useful for
researchers on teachers and teaching as well as for teacher
educators, curriculum designers, educational officials, and,
last-but-not-least, anyone who is interested in what makes a good
teacher. This volume is also a tribute to Fritz Oser, a leading
scholar in research on ethos, who sadly passed-away during the
compilation of this handbook.
The academic fields of religion and values have become the focus of
renewed interest in contemporary thinking about human activity and
its motivations. The Routledge International Handbook of Education,
Religion and Values explores and expands upon a range of
international research related to this revival. The book provides
an authoritative overview of global issues in religion and values,
surveying the state of the academic area in contributions covering
a wide range of topics. It includes emerging, controversial, and
cutting-edge contributions, as well as investigations into more
established areas. International authorities Arthur and Lovat have
brought together experts from across the world to examine the
complexity of the field of study. The handbook is organised around
four key topics, which focus on both the importance of religion and
values as broad fields of human enquiry, as well as in their
application to education, inter-agency work and cross-cultural
endeavours: -The Conceptual World of Religion and Values -Religion
and Values in Education -Religion and Values in Inter-agency Work
-Religion and Values in Cross-cultural Work. This comprehensive
reference work combines theoretical and empirical research of
international significance, and will be valuable reading for
students, researchers and academics in the field of education.
The academic fields of religion and values have become the focus of
renewed interest in contemporary thinking about human activity and
its motivations. The Routledge International Handbook of Education,
Religion and Values explores and expands upon a range of
international research related to this revival. The book provides
an authoritative overview of global issues in religion and values,
surveying the state of the academic area in contributions covering
a wide range of topics. It includes emerging, controversial, and
cutting-edge contributions, as well as investigations into more
established areas. International authorities Arthur and Lovat have
brought together experts from across the world to examine the
complexity of the field of study. The handbook is organised around
four key topics, which focus on both the importance of religion and
values as broad fields of human enquiry, as well as in their
application to education, inter-agency work and cross-cultural
endeavours: -The Conceptual World of Religion and Values -Religion
and Values in Education -Religion and Values in Inter-agency Work
-Religion and Values in Cross-cultural Work. This comprehensive
reference work combines theoretical and empirical research of
international significance, and will be valuable reading for
students, researchers and academics in the field of education.
Under the weight of a combination of forces, many of the older
paradigms of learning are being questioned in our time. Among the
updated research that elicits such critique is that which deals
directly with effective pedagogy, clearly illustrating the enhanced
effects on learning when it is dealt with as a holistic
developmental enterprise rather than one concerned solely with
content, technique and measurable outcomes. This research includes
volumes of empirical evidence and conceptual analysis from across
the globe that point to the inextricability of values as lying at
the heart of those forms of good practice pedagogy that support and
facilitate the species of student achievement that truly does
transform the life chances of students. This research indicates
that the combination of values rich learning environments and
values discourse (that is, the holism of implicit and explicit
pedagogy) has potential for positive influence on learning
outcomes, most markedly for those deemed likely to fail without
such pedagogical intervention. Values Pedagogy and Student
Achievement - Contemporary Research Evidence uncovers, explores and
appraises those volumes of evidence and analysis, illustrating
their pertinence to student achievement, the vexed issue that lies
at the heart of all for which education stands.
Muhammad al-Tabari's History, written about 300 years after the
establishment of Islam, is one of the religion's most important
commentaries. It offers important insights into the early
development of Islam, not so much for its history as for the ways
it was interpreted and understood. Through application of modern
historiographical analysis and scriptural exegesis, the book
explores the space between factual history and interpretive
history, or histoire. The focus is especially on the ways in which
al-Tabari himself understood and interpreted Qur'anic evidence,
employing it not so much for literal as for political purposes. In
this sense, his work is best understood not as a reliable history
in the modern sense but as a politically-inspired commentary.
Granted that his work has often been relied on for Islam's
historical claims, this book offers important new insights into the
ways in which power and politics were shaping interpretations in
its first three hundred years.
This book applies philosophical and critical textual scholarship to
the traditional Islamic narrative in an attempt to distinguish
between its historical and interpretive elements. It allows the
narrative to be preserved with due respect for its significance and
distinctiveness, but in a way that frees it from the ease with
which it can slip into the hands of literalists and fundamentalists
in order to serve a purpose which is at odds with its original
spirit and intention. When radical Islamists use social media to
try and convert young followers to a Jihadist cause, they refer
often to the narrative about the Prophet, the original Islamic
community (Ummah), and the holy book (Qur'an). The references
usually imply that these are under threat by infidels, either
non-Muslim Westerners or Muslims themselves who follow allegedly
errant forms of Islam. The narrative itself is, however, never
questioned; it is taken as merely factual with every word to be
taken literally, including words that appear intolerant of
difference and given to violence. As such, it can serve well the
forms of fundamentalism that lie at the heart of radical Islamism
and Jihadism. Because of a shortage of critical scholarship about
Islam's central narrative, the radical Islamist understanding of it
differs too little from that of mainstream Muslims. Neither tends
to take sufficient account of the context of the writing, its
original purpose or the many interpretive elements that have been
overlain. This makes it difficult for mainstream Islamic
authorities to counter effectively the radical Islamist discourse
or to distinguish moderate and liberal forms of religious practice
from radical breakaway forms. In turn, this causes confusion among
Muslims, who know the radical Islamists are in error but find it
hard to say just why, and even greater confusion and angst among
non-Muslims, for whom the allegation that all of Islam is
inherently violent and to be feared is clearly being heard by an
increasing number. This book sets out to address this problem by
applying forms of scholarship that can preserve the best of the
Islamic narrative while, at the same time, illustrating just how
errant is the radical Islamist understanding of it.
This book moves away from the frameworks that have traditionally
guided ethical decision-making in the Western clinical setting,
towards an inclusive, non-coercive and, reflective dialogic
approach to moral decision-making. Inspired in part by Jurgen
Habermas's discourse theory of morality and principles of
communicative action, the book offers a proportionist approach as a
way of balancing out the wisdom in traditional frameworks, set in
the actual reality of the clinical situation at hand. Putting this
approach into practice requires having a conversation, a dialogue
or a discourse, with collaboration amongst all the stakeholders.
The aim of the dialogue is to reach consensus in the decision, via
mutual understanding of the values held by the patient and others
whom they see as significant. This book aims to underscore the
moral philosophical foundations for having a meaningful
conversation. Life and Death Decision in the Clinical Setting is
especially relevant in our contemporary era, characterised
medically by an ever-increasing armamentarium of life-sustaining
technology, but also by increasing multiculturalism, a multiplicity
of faiths, and increasing value pluralism.
Informed by the most up-to-date research from around the world, as
well as examples of good practice, this handbook analyzes values
education in the context of a range of school-based measures
associated with student wellbeing. These include social, emotional,
moral and spiritual growth - elements that seem to be present where
intellectual advancement and academic achievement are being
maximized. This text comes as 'values education' widens in scope
from being concerned with morality, ethics, civics and citizenship
to a broader definition synonymous with a holistic approach to
education in general. This expanded purview is frequently described
as pedagogy relating to 'values' and 'wellbeing'. This contemporary
understanding of values education, or values and wellbeing
pedagogy, fits well with recent neuroscience research. This has
shown that notions of cognition, or intellect, are far more
intertwined with social and emotional growth than earlier
educational paradigms have allowed for. In other words, the best
laid plans about the technical aspects of pedagogy are bound to
fail unless the growth of the whole person - social, emotional,
moral, spiritual and intellectual, is the pedagogical target.
Teachers and educationalists will find that this handbook provides
evidence, culled from both research and practice, of the beneficial
effects of such a 'values and wellbeing' pedagogy.
At the present time, when so-called Islamic radicalism, terrorism
and Jihadism occupy major media space, with Islam often depicted as
the main culprit, the book attempts a tour de force. It proposes
that Islam is as much victim as culprit in the history that has led
to the current hostility. This is because the common claims of both
mainstream and radical Islam that Islam represents the high point
of the Abrahamic tradition, and therefore a purification of Judaism
and Christianity, have been largely ignored, misunderstood or
blatantly rejected by these faiths and therefore by 'the West' in
general. This rejection has effectively rendered Islam as the poor
cousin, if not the illegitimate sibling, of the tradition. In turn,
this has created long-term resentment and hostility within Islam as
well as robbed the 'Judaeo-Christian West' of a rich, inter-faith
understanding of the wider Abrahamic tradition. The book explores
these claims through textual, historical and theological analyses,
proposing that many of them stand up better to critical scrutiny
than has been commonly acknowledged. It further proposes that
seeing Islam in this way has potential to re-awaken its
self-understanding as a leader of accord among the Abrahamic
faiths, of the kind that characterized the era of Convivencia when,
in medieval Spain, Islam constructed and contributed to advanced
civilizations characterized by relatively harmonious co-existence
between Muslims, Christians and Jews. The book focuses on the role
that a more respected and self-confident Islam could play in
forging enhanced inter-faith relations in a world that desperately
needs them as it struggles to understand and deal with modern and
particularly vicious forms of radical Islamism.
The role of women in Islamic societies, not to mention in the
religion itself, is a defining issue. It is also one that remains
resistant to universal dogma, with a wide range of responses to
women's social roles across the Islamic world. Reflecting this
heterogeneity, the editor of this volume has assembled the latest
research on the issue, which combines contemporary with historical
data. The material comes from around the world as well as from
Muslim and non-Muslim researchers. It takes in work from majority
Muslim nations such as Bangladesh, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Pakistan,
Palestine, Tunisia and Turkey, as well as countries with troubled
interfaith relations such as India and Israel. Nations with
minority Muslim populations such as France, the UK, Canada and
Australia, are also represented. The work also features varying
Islamic sub-groups such as the two main ones, Sunni and Shi'a, as
well as less well known populations such as the Ismaili Muslims. In
each case, the work is underpinned by the very latest
socio-theological insights and empirical data.
Some revision of public schooling history is necessary to challenge
the dominant mythology that public schools were established on the
grounds of values-neutrality. In fact, those responsible for the
foundations of public education in Australia were sufficiently
pragmatic to know that its success relied on its charter being in
accord with public sentiment. Part of the pragmatism was in
convincing those whose main experience of education had been
through some form of church-based education that state-based
education was capable of meeting the same ends. Hence, the
documents of the 1870s and 1880s that contained the charters of the
various state and territory systems witness to a breadth of vision
about the scope of education. Beyond the standard goals of literacy
and numeracy, education was said to be capable of assuring personal
morality for each individual and a suitable citizenry for the
soon-to-be new nation. As an instance, the NSW Public Instr- tion
Act of 1880 (cf. NSW, 1912), under the rubric of "religious
teaching," stressed the need for students to be inculcated into the
values of their society, including understanding the role that
religious values had played in forming that society's legal codes
and social ethics. The notion, therefore, that public education is
part of a deep and ancient heritage around values neutrality is
mistaken and in need of se- ous revision. The evidence suggests
that public education's initial conception was of being the
complete educator, not only of young people's minds but of their
inner character as well.
This volume is the first handbook that brings together cutting-edge
international research on teacher ethos from a broad array of
disciplines. The main focus will be on research that illustrates
current conceptualizations of ethos and its importance for acting
effectively and responsibly in and out of the classroom. Research
will encompass updated empirical and philosophical work that points
to the difference in learning when teaching is practised as a moral
activity instead of a merely functional one. Authors are among the
world's foremost researchers whose work crosses over from moral
education into psychology, neuroscience, sociology, philosophy,
pedagogy, and curriculum, drawing on these various fields of
research. Today, more than ever, we understand that teachers, like
other professionals, need more than subject-matter expertise for
acting responsibly and doing their best in their daily duties.
Doing so requires possessing a guiding system of professional
ethics, moral positioning, goals, norms, and values - in other
words: a professional ethos. While the handbook concentrates on
Western domains in the current era, the work will extend to other
cultures and times as well. With this comprehensive range of
perspectives, the book will be attractive and useful for
researchers on teachers and teaching as well as for teacher
educators, curriculum designers, educational officials, and,
last-but-not-least, anyone who is interested in what makes a good
teacher. This volume is also a tribute to Fritz Oser, a leading
scholar in research on ethos, who sadly passed-away during the
compilation of this handbook.
This book summarizes and updates findings from the Australian
Values Education Program with a focus on the latest international
research in the field, both theoretical and practice-based.
Further, it provides a theoretical and practical basis for
understanding the disenchantment with low-level accountability
approaches to learning (e.g. NAPLAN in Australia). In turn, the
book demonstrates the effectiveness of Values Education as a
holistic pedagogy with the potential to enhance students' learning
effects in terms of their personal, social, emotional and academic
development. It offers well-tested alternative pedagogical
approaches, based on research insights largely originating from
actual classroom-based practice.
Research Articles:* Resurrection and Reality in the Theology of
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Christopher RJ Holmes* Bridging the Gap:
Dietrich Bonhoeffer's Early Theology and its Influence on
Discipleship, Joseph McGarry* Binding Sovereignties: Dietrich
Bonhoeffer and the Virtues, Dallas Gingles* Hermann Sasse and
Dietrich Bonhoeffer: Churchmen on the Brink, Maurice Schild*'Lord
of the (Warming) World': Bonhoeffer's Eco-theological Ethic and the
Gandhi Factor, Dianne Rayson & Terence Lovat* Other Article:*
The Bonhoeffer Society as Mentor, Keith Clements
The Bonhoeffer Legacy: Australasian Journal of Bonhoeffer Studies
is a fully refereed academic journal aimed principally at providing
an outlet for an ever expanding Bonhoeffer scholarship in
Australia, New Zealand and the South Pacific region, as well as
being open to article submissions from Bonhoeffer scholars
throughout the world. It also aims to elicit and encourage future
and ongoing scholarship in the field. The focus of the journal,
captured in the notion of 'Legacy', is on any aspect of
Bonhoeffer's life, theology and political action that is relevant
to his immense contribution to twentieth century events and
scholarship. 'Legacy' can be understood as including those events
and ideas that contributed to Bonhoeffer's own development, those
that constituted his own context or those that have developed since
his time as a result of his work. The editors encourage and welcome
any scholarship that contributes to the journal's aims. The journal
also has book reviews.
Research Articles:* Resurrection and Reality in the Theology of
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Christopher RJ Holmes* Bridging the Gap:
Dietrich Bonhoeffer's Early Theology and its Influence on
Discipleship, Joseph McGarry* Binding Sovereignties: Dietrich
Bonhoeffer and the Virtues, Dallas Gingles* Hermann Sasse and
Dietrich Bonhoeffer: Churchmen on the Brink, Maurice Schild*'Lord
of the (Warming) World': Bonhoeffer's Eco-theological Ethic and the
Gandhi Factor, Dianne Rayson & Terence Lovat* Other Article:*
The Bonhoeffer Society as Mentor, Keith Clements
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